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How did these NXT Superstars react to being offered a WWE contract?: Ask the WWE PC, Feb. 17, 2018

From getting inked up with a turnbuckle tattoo to making joyful phone calls to loved ones, NXT Superstars and Performance Center recruits reveal their first reactions to being offered WWE contracts.

02/16/2018 - 12:45

Craziest Elimination Chamber leaps: WWE Top 10, Feb. 17, 2018

No Superstar is afraid to take the battle to new heights, even when he - and this year, for the first time, she - is confined inside the Elimination Chamber. Here are 10 of the craziest leaps to take place during an Elimination Chamber Match.

Apollo Crews & Nia Jax get to know representatives and survivors from their charity partner, Susan G. Komen, as they take up the fight against Breast Cancer on WWE Mixed Match Challenge, airing Tuesdays at 10 ET/7 PT, exclusively on Facebook Watch.

02/02/2018 - 20:15

Lana picks up her first-ever win in WWE Mixed Match Challenge: WWE Now

Braun Strowman makes beautiful music on Raw and leaves us wanting more from the "Monster Among Music."

02/15/2018 - 16:45

Jinder Mahal disrupts Bobby Roode's U.S. Title Open Challenge: Wal3ooha, 15 February, 2018The Modern Day Maharaja interrupts Randy Orton and Bobby Roode when The Viper answers The Glorious One's U.S. Title Open Challenge on SmackDown LIVE.02/15/2018 - 14:58

Nia Jax attacks Sasha Banks and Bayley on Raw: Wal3ooha, 15 February, 2018An in-ring moment between The Boss and The Huggable One comes to a sudden and brutal end when Nia Jax decides to send a message to Asuka.02/15/2018 - 14:54

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The Secret Skills of the Superstars

“I want to say I started playing in the fifth grade. I picked the saxophone because as far as rentals went it was the cheapest. I chose an alto, and it was also the wind instrument that sounded most like the human voice, which I thought was very interesting. Reading sheet music was the hardest part about it, though. If you were into punk rock in the mid-1990s, then chances are you were also into third-wave ska music. I just liked it—you could shake and dance around in a different way than you could a hardcore show. What’s not to like about that? So to make a short story even shorter, many years ago, before I started this career, I briefly played with a local band called Hot Stove Jimmy. You’ve probably never heard of them. Their sound could be categorized as Chicago jump-up ska, from that very same third-wave ska revival. I was friends with a lot of guys in the band. One day, their saxophone player moved to Denver and, as a joke, the drummer asked, ‘do you still have your trumpet?’ even though I played the sax. They told me to bring it to practice. I wound up practicing with them but never too seriously. Eventually, they told me I wasn’t that good. That was fine; I was going to be a wrestler anyway. I’m sure I’ll play again someday. I can probably play whatever, a little of this or a bit of that. I was never very good at reading sheet music, but if I can hear it I can probably figure it out. The question was posed to me, ‘If you had to name a ska band after a wrestler, what would you call it?’ The answer to that question is an easy one. Skamala, of course!”

Secret Skill: CriminologyDrew McIntyre

“When I picked up criminology, it was a new course at the time at university, so I was a guinea pig. My class has about 20 girls, me and another guy. I assumed it would be mostly guys for criminology. But no, it was mostly girls; they weren’t even that hot. The greatest difference between crime in Scotland and crime in America is that less people get shot and more people get stabbed. Most people survive. It’s generally a bottle to the head here and there. Some people could make a lot of money by doing studies of the guys in our locker room. CM Punk, for example, shows criminal tendencies. He never sleeps, has shifty eyes. He’s very intelligent. It’s been suggested that David Otunga, with his Harvard degree, and I form a tag team called, ‘Law & Order.’ I don’t think we would call it that. I think we’d call it something more awesome. But I could see us as a team. I could get in trouble and he could save me each and every time.”

Secret Skill: ScrapbookingVickie Guerrero

“I started scrapbooking when my oldest daughter was five years old, and I’ve been doing it for close to 22 years. Instead of keeping photos in a shoebox, scrapbooking is a great way to preserve them in a book you can pass down from generation to generation. When I talk to my customers and they’re able to tell their stories, that means a lot to them. For me to be able to transfer that into a book and to see how happy they are with it—that’s a big reward. Technology is always changing. And now I’m into digital printing. I can work with customers online, and Skype with them. It’s funny, because they’ll call to say, ‘I just found more pictures. Can I add some?’ My golden rule is: Once I have a consultation, I can’t go back and keeping adding pages. One book, like the one you are looking at, takes about three months. My next step, after I finish in WWE, and my dream is to open up a store in El Paso. For now, check out myvickieguerrero.com.”

To read more about the secret skills of WWE superstars, including Dolph Ziggler, Eve, Johnny Curtis and Beth Phoenix, pick-up the August issue available today or SUBSCRIBE HERE and save 70% off newsstand sale price.